Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / June 13, 1927, edition 1 / Page 3
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Monday, June 13, 1927 EASTERN* STAR TO HOLD CONVENTION Many Distinguished Members To Attend Meeting in Salisbury. Salisbury. June 12.—The 22nd an nual session of the (1 rand Chapter of the Order of Eastern Star of North Carolina will meet in Salisbury, Mon day night, June 1 Hih, for reception by Salisbury Chapter No. 11". This convocation of the Order will have more of its distinguished members present thnn any in the history of the order in the State. Besides Mrs. slaude E. Hester, of Beidsville, Worthy Grand Matron, and Prof. Wiley M. Pickeus, of Lin colnton, Worthy Grand Patron, many of the Post Grand Matrons and Pat rons of North Carolina, will be in attendance, and also Mrs. Gertrude *T. Bush, Past Grand Matron of Vir ginia, and Mrs. Frances E. Hobbs, Past Grand Matron of Scotland. The session will rlso be honored by the presence of Pust Grand Master Leon Cash, of Winston-Salem, and Most Worshipful Grand Master John H. Anderson, of Fayetteville. Grand Master Anderson will address the Grand Chapter on Tuesday evening. lie real 'business of thg session will y*esin on Tuesday morning at ft:80, when it will be formally opened. There will be sessions morning, afternoon and evening during Tuesday and Wed foOL SUMMER VOILES $6* 85 PATTERNS ASSORTMENT Dark and light grounds in designs suitable and Consisting of 24 youthful pleasing to the Stout Wo- styles. ' "* mUI TRIMMINGS Those Slenderizing Fig are Lace, Plain Voile, . ured Voile Dresses are Pleated Skirt, Button made of “Trade Marked” Trim Throvy Tie, Tailor- extra fine: quality hard ed Bow Tie or Flowers. twist Voiles. AIR BRUSH PRINTS Misers’ t , Also featuring Stout GLORIA VOILE i Sizes BRITTANY VOILE S,zes 1,, ESSEX VOILE jn i 9 a 14 to 42 CHARM VOILE ' 40 12 to 52 12 SENORITA VOILE 1 28 South Union St. Concord, N. C. ■■ « ! , ' — , ~pfr=flS3l It- / \ I i Here is the lowest priced unit of the unequaled Copeland line—the Cope land "215”. It fits into any corner of the is moved around as easily as a piece of furniture, and requires no piping or tube connections. You simply plug into the nearest electric light socket and forever after enjoy the conven iences and advantages of dependable electric refriger ation! Only a few dollars down puts the Copeland “215” in yaUr homel |K ' ! ' ? .. r Concord Furniture Co. sms Smart dimmer Foot- J/n\ 1 wear Os Oatstanding V Quality X \ \ Styles and Quality equal to the Best, while '"V the prices are very much less. Han \ BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS \ ALL NEW AND CRISP Every pair guaranteed vg 6. A. Moser Shoe Store needay, June 14 and 15th, when much business will be transacted. The order has grown in rapid strides in North Carolina, as well as throughout the world for the past few years. There are in North Carolinn nearly seven thousand members, and the membership in the world numbers more than two million. The different bodies of the Masonic fraternity in Salisbury are joining in with the sister fraternity in en tertaining, and there will be a round of social events. ' 51.000 Llndy Telegrams Delivered at White House, Washington, June 13 —A batch of ■ 52.000 telegrams addressed to "Col. • i Charles A. Lindbergh, in care of i j President Coolidge," was delivered > I to the White House in one load. • ; A dozen messenger boys carried , the messages, one of which waa 520 . feet long. It came from Minneapolis . and was signed by seventeen thoua i , and persons. : s All during the early part of last . night the messengers kept the trail 1 ; hot to the White House with words ■ : of congratulation wired to Col. Lind : bergh from every section of the na- I i tion and from 1 most parts of the i world. i : I Hundreds of tiie tc'cgrnms were ! from heartsick maidens who included i their addresses’. - ‘ / ' ' ' " I I i ' v i : © PI 5 "n “J y> ~ 2 30 a> 3 □ < « 2 (0 cv E aj 3 w (O pi Cg 11 " > TJ , o ri a n = z a > < a Z 3 a. 2 CD Cl r" fti 1 < PI 1 < I J • i I • 1 I K;"- ; . 1 ] THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE Rewards Os $2,500 Are Offered For Slayer Os Greenville, S. C., Sheriff Greenville. June 12.—Rewards ag gregating $2,500 have been offered by the city, county and state for the capture, dead or alive, of the unknown man who shot and killed Sheriff Sam I). Willis, of Greenville county, at midnight last night just after he had driven his ear into his garage at his \ home on East Stone avenue, this city, but thus far no arrests have been made. Armed posses continue to scour every seetiou of the county today for the assassin but nothing has been given out by the officers to indicate that they have any very definite clues. Blood hounds were brought from Pick ens last night but lost the trail at a i point about one block from the sher iff’s home where the assailant is be lieved to have boarded a motor ve hicle, probably a truck. The belief has grown today that the sheriff was slain because of re cent activities against the illicit whisky traffic in Greenville county. Washington Impressed By Personality of Lindbergh Washington, June 12. Lind- ] bergh’s visit to the national capital has made history in more ways than i one- Under a blistering sun people : who usually look boredly upon a i parade from a nicely sheltered win- i dow were spotted yesterday "trying 1 to mnke" all of the high spots m 1 ' the performance. They tried to see ■ ; Lindbergh come out of the Navy Yard, then bent the procession to the i Capitol grounds, then rushed to the . monument grounds and then took their places before the temporaYy i White House. At each of these < points they wanted to get another look at the young aviator. Then again at night there were , two receptions where Lindbergh might, be seen and toward midnight many a bedraggled one tottered homeward tired, but happy. There were nearly a hundred heat pros trations during the day, but it was i a case of the survival of the fittest and the most determined. Appreciation of young Lindbergh’s personality, marvelous to say, was sharp'.}- evinced among the classes of ' people most exposed to celebrities and celebrations. The White House ' policemen craned their necks and re marked upon the handsome figure the aviator cut in hi's full evening dress, responding, as he occasionally did, to tile existence of the street crowds. "Hey, keep out of there," one of them cried, stopping an unwary motorist blocks from the temporary White House where the closing of the streets began. "Don’t you know | that all the streets down here to night belong to IJndy? You can't ( go there and nobody can.” ; ( Two or three marine bandsmen. \ who had marched in the snappy ( 1 parade ahead of the flier during the i afternoon, had assembled under the HISTORIANS FOR COUNTIES NAMED j Suggestion of State Historical Com mission Meets Popular ■ Favor: j I Raleigh News and Observer. The idea of a “county historian I for each county in North Carolina.” | suggested in a recent letter from the j North Carolina Historical Commis ! sion requesting the Board of Educa tion in each county to make tue ap pointment, has been rweived favor- 1 ably in the State. Local am) daily papers have given ! the . project wide publicity and, in • many eases, editorial indorsement.! County superintendents, local his-1 torieal agencies, ana interested lay-! men have given their support to the p'an. Already county historians have been appointed by the boards of edu cation in nine counties, and others i are under consideration. The following appointments as county historian have been reported to the Historical Commission: Anson County. W. K. Boggan, Wadesboro; Avery, S. M. Dugger. Banner Elk; Burke, Mrs. A. C. Avery. Jr„ Mor gan toil ; Cherokee. W. M- West. Murphy.; Cumberland. Mrs. John H. Anderson, Fayetteville; • Forsyth, Miss Adelaide L. Fries. Winston- Salem ; Franklin. Dr. D. T. Smith wick. Loirisburg; Guilford, Dr. W. T. Whitsett, Whitsett ana Harnett, D. P. McDonald, Oliva. In some counties, the newly appointed his torians are considering the ad visability of forming a county his- association. The plan which <lie Historical Commission is promoting is designed to stimulate an increase in knowl edge. interest, appreciation and ac tivity as related to history, par ticularly local history in the State. Extension Favored By i Charlotte Body. Charlotte, Jund 11. —City Cnm missjoilers today joined with several other cities in adopting a resolution urging the Interstate Commerce Commission to sanction the exten sion of the Piedmont and Northern Railway. Members of the board unanimously voted in favor of the resolution. Extension of the line, the resolu tion contends, is vital and essential for the present and future welfare of this ns well as other cities. Three cities, Concord, Lexington and Salisbury—have urged the com mission to net. Winston-Salem is considering it. reports before the commissioners indicated. Dr. Chase Leaves For Vacation. Chapel Hill, N. C„ June Xl.—Ac companied by Mrs. Chase and their daughter, Beth, Dr. Harry Woodburn Chase, president of the University of North Carolina, left here today for New York, whence they sail for Europe the first of the week. Dr. Chase will be gone until Christmas. He- will spend the sum mer in London and the fall in Paris and other places on the Continent. The pnrpoee of their trip is to give Dr. Chase a vacation. i It was said today by persons close to him that he had recently received warning from some unknown party. The identity of the senders or the exact nature of the warning could not be learned but it iR said by friends of the late sheriff that they ! related to his activity against the bootleggers. The sheriff had just driven his car into his garage and judging from the position of the body found in the garage door, he had been attracted by B noise or the sight of the assasin. He had driven his machine into the left compartment of a double garage and had vacated it on the left side leaving the door open and the key in the switch. He was shot from the | leftlinnd side. The city of Greenville today offered a reward of SSOO for the capture of his assailant the county of Greenville offered SI,OOO and Governor Richards at Columbia offered SI,OOO making a grand total of $2,500. palms of the White House dining room to play for the Cabinet dinner and then finished off a heavy day in the unceasing heat by furnishing music for his downtown reception, sneaked out of the orchestra pit dur ing an intermission to throw open their red and gilt laden coats. And they too were discussing Lindbergh with enthusiasm. • “I though this was all newspaper stuff about libs hand ing himself so well." chimed in one. "but did you see him up at the White House dinner. Talking away with the Presi dent. all the Cabinet sitting around with their coffee and cflgnrs. a lad as ybung as he is, so at: home and just right.” The extraordinary feminine pre dominance in the crowds attending Lindbergh's movements about the city was notable. In Du Pont Circle, where the faithful watchers were always on hand Til numbers swelling occasionally up to the thousands, it was a group of college boys chant ing, "Carry me baek to Old Vir ginia.” who last night first dupli cated the singing appeal which was most calculated to call Lindbergh out for a momentary display, but it was the women who picked up the idea. One soprano voice attempted the “Star Spangled Banner” pitched too high. An alto of true volume and carrying power sprung out as the crowd jeered the breakdown of the first attempt. Some hundreds of women would carry this tune and the impromptu chorus ruled the hohking automobiles and the crowd noises down triumphantly. The close of the ruceessful sung anthem, to which -the policeman, in a cleared space swung his baton for timing, was greeted with immense cheering, and Lindbergh and his mother came to a window to receive another ovation. 'CHAMBERLAIN DELAYED j BY ENGINE TROUBLE ( Will Take Several Days to Make | Necessary Repairs to His Big j Monoplane. | Berlin, June 12.—Munich and i Vienna are not likely to see the . Bel.anca plane Columbia for several days. Clarence Chamberlin the Co lumbia’s pilot, has found a motor de . i feet, caused by the jamming of the ! valve mechanism. This will necessi- I tate dismounting the motor and lay ing the parts free. Special wrenches j required for this repair were leu in I America on account iff weight. | AA the type of engine Installed in : the Columbia is unfamiliar to Ger man workers,' it will require more than the ordinary time to make the ; necessary changes. j Chamberlin and Levine are going ■ to Baden for a brief rest after their 1 strenuous official engagements, but they expect to meet their wives on their arrival at Bremerhaven June 17. Kiddles to Have Fun at Junaluska. Lake Junaluska, June 13.—Miss Louise Durham, of Memphis, Tenn., will again supervise the children’s playground and have geueral oversight over children’s activities at the Meth odist assembly at Lake Junaluska during the approaching season, it is announced by Ralph E. Nollner, gen eral superintendent. Lake Junaluska has been acclaimed by visitors as a “children's paradise,” and the play ground population numbers’from 200 to 500 every day during the season. In addition to the large modern playground, completely equipped and supervised, another feature provided for the entertainment and instruction of children at Lake Junaluska is a vacation Bible school conducted by. ex pert* in religious work for children, under the auspices of the Sunday school board, Methodist Episcopal Church, South. The Sunday afternoon story hour, under the direction of John R. Pepper, of Memphis, is also one of the most popular features of the assembly pro gram. Recreational and entertainment fea tures for children at Lake Junaluska each summer are largely sponsored by Mr. Pepper and J. B. Ivey, of Charlotte, who have been designated as the “patron saints of the little peo ple.” Miss Durham is .eacher of arts and crafts in city schools of Memphis, Tenn. Byrd Won’t Hop Off Wednesday. Richmond. Va., June 12.—Com mander Richard Evelyn Ryrd, who wan to have hopped off for a round trip from New York to Paris, early Wednesday morning has changed his p’ans and will be at Virginia Military Institute Wednesday when the degree of Civil Engineer will be conferred upon him, his brother, Governor Harry F. Byrd, of Vir ginia, announced today- jEßtt THE PRIZE-WINNING NAME FOR 'Slj jyj * J h' V t i fry l You have never heard an instrument ' 1 ■- 1 ■ 1 I *s M - like this before: It embodies an ab- y ■g— solutely new principle of sound repro- " ■ / >^SESSsiiB.. l!j__ duction that guarantees naturalness and • *' >. _ n . ~ . beauty of tone. E~= t | ’HE Brunswick* E~ • ’■ Just hear thePRISMATONE once, and -1 Balke-Col lender jjSEi£ —■ you’ll wonder how every single sound ■■' « C°- recently spon- g"" ~"'T —from the merest whisper to the crash sored a contest to name ~ mmm of the brasses in an orchestra —can be its new musical instru so lifelike. ment. More than, a Prismatone reproduction means ar million suggestions exact duplicate of the artists’ effort, were received. The ’ plus a softness of tone the like of which prize-winners are: has never been heard before. I'll Til : Let us demonstrate —at this shop or in Miss Mildred A. Buz, iaia i'll the privacy of your home. There is Melrose Ave., Melrose t •;(« no obligation, of course; but once you BwkriSkpfuZSZl ! ; ' 5 hear the Prismatone you 11 want it — * Slogan —“ The instrument ■= with all its endless entertainment. of colorful music.” Second Prise , - . t i Brunswick “Light-Ray** Records «... itoSSJ*,, Here is musical photography, an Murphy Ave., Nashville, > entirely new principle of electrical Tenn. Name The • •;»£ recording. In Brunswick “Light-Ray” Records you have a naturalness and ments in one, one instru* beauty of tone that is truly amazing— ment in many.” and they can he played on any typ* ***** of reproducing instrument. Mr. p L js*grson, y g m Coast Guard, Section Base ! tij .•# K 13, Port Angeles, Wash. ~’i = C/anmwnck = =* «£a Slogan -r- “A new age, a fiSal Pass(ropes Prismatoncs Radhlas Retards «-—j new instrument.” |-. - Just because the Ford car is a glutton for punishment is no reason why.it should not have proper lubrication | t A Your Ford will give you better service, cost you less for repairs and last longer if you lubricate it with "Standard” Motor Oil for Fords. Ask for it by name. Then you’re sure of the best Ford oil money can buy. "STANDARD” MOTOR OIL The Oil Value STAMPED TIDES AND Till HE PENNY IDS ALWAYS GET RESULTS PAGE THREE
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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June 13, 1927, edition 1
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